Commercial and civilian drones are already here — even if they’re not
supposed to be. Officially, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
forbids commercial operation of unmanned aircraft in U.S. national air
space, but that hasn’t stopped a growing number of them from taking to
the skies.
In January, the Los Angeles Police Department had to warn real estate
agents not to use images of properties taken from a remotely controlled
aircraft.
During the Occupy movement in New York City last November, reporter Tim
Pool obtained a bird’s-eye view of police action in Zuccotti Park from a
customized two-foot-wide drone flying overhead. The camera-equipped
device streamed live video to the journalist’s smartphone, which relayed
the footage to a public Internet stream.
And since 2011, News Corp.’s The Daily has had a news-gathering drone
that it reportedly used to capture aerial footage of post-storm Alabama
and flooding in South Dakota.
Unmanned aircrafts are trickling into use now, but the floodgates will
open in 2015: That’s when the FAA will officially allow operation of
commercial drones in U.S. air space. The agency predicts that 15,000
flying robots will be winging their way through the nation’s skies by
2020, and that number will double by 2030.
Once that swarm of pilotless aircraft is set loose, it’ll be up to state
and local officials to sort out most of the rules for using these
devices safely, securely and without trampling on privacy rights.
“Some kind of consistent policy would be a nice thing to have, but there
isn’t an agency or arm of the [federal] government that’s in a position
to enforce any privacy regulations,” said Matt Waite, a journalism
professor at University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). “These kinds of laws
generallytend to be delegated to the states.”
Within the year, the FAA must allow any “government public safety
agency” to operate an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) weighing 25 pounds
or less as long as certain conditions, such as daytime use, are met.
Currently, few of the thousands of law enforcement agencies in the
United States have access to air support, said Don Shinnamon, a public
safety aviation consultant. “This technology has the potential to bring
air support to many public safety agencies,” he said. “It means a higher
level of public safety.”
Montgomery County, Texas, is about to test that theory. The county,
located north of Houston, unveiled its three-foot, 55-pound UAV in
October.
“We have our share of crime,” said Chief Deputy Randy McDaniel of the
Sheriff’s Office. “We have no airplanes and no helicopters, because of
the expense involved. We’ve always had to defer to [other agencies] to
hopefully help us in those situations where we needed an aircraft.
Oftentimes, they’re out doing their own work.”
Purchased with the help of a grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS), the county’s $260,000 UAV has yet to be deployed on a
mission. But McDaniel has big plans for the device, which looks like a
miniature helicopter. The UAV could give a rescue squad an aerial view
of a hostage situation, he said, or in the case of an unknown chemical
spill, it could read the placard on the container without sending a
person into harm’s way. “We bought this for specific reasons,” McDaniel
said. “It is for critical incidents where an air asset would be an
appropriate way of providing information that we wouldn’t otherwise
have.”
Michael Toscano, president and CEO of the nonprofit Association for
Unmanned Vehicle Systems, predicts that drones will begin to assume some
of the more “dangerous, difficult and dull” missions performed by
government agencies. For instance, when law enforcement officials are
forced to call off a search because of unfavorable weather conditions, a
UAV could continue surveillance through the storm. Or when officials
need a nonintrusive way to count wildlife or inspectors want to check a
damaged roof, a UAV is the ideal candidate. “With better situational
awareness, you make better decisions,” Toscano said. “You’re more
effective and efficient, and you’re safer.”
UAVs can give public safety officials a leg up in just about any
situation, added Shinnamon, a certified firefighter and former police
chief. To minimize some of the risks firefighters face when they climb
onto the roof of a burning building, he said, a UAV could be deployed to
seek out hot spots where the structure is most likely compromised. If a
toddler wanders off or an Alzheimer’s patient goes missing, Shinnamon
said, a UAV could provide a bird’s-eye view of the scene, helping to
expedite the search.
“The view you get from an aerial perspective is so much better than you
get standing on a street corner,” he said. “If that’s your kid who’s
missing or your relative who’s an Alzheimer’s patient, you want the
police to use anything available to help find them.”
But the emergence of unmanned aircraft technology also is stirring up
worries over safety and privacy, particularly as this equipment makes it
into the hands of commercial organizations.
For instance, UAVs flown by minimally trained operators could pose a
hazard, said Mary (Missy) Cummings, associate professor of aeronautics
and astronautics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. To
address some of these concerns, the FAA will propose a rule on small
unmanned aircraft systems this year, working with industry to establish
approval criteria, according to a spokesperson. In addition, the
Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems recently released a code of
conduct that includes recommendations for safe, nonintrusive operation.
As for privacy, civil liberties advocates have expressed concerns about
the potential for UAV use to violate citizens’ rights. Last year, the
American Civil Liberties Union published a report providing
recommendations for government use of drone aircraft.
“We need a system of rules to ensure that we can enjoy the benefits of
this technology without bringing us a large step closer to a
‘surveillance society’ in which our every move is monitored, tracked,
recorded and scrutinized by the authorities,” wrote authors Jay Stanley
and Catherine Crump. “The prospect of cheap, small, portable flying
video surveillance machines threatens to eradicate existing practical
limits on aerial monitoring and allow for pervasive surveillance, police
fishing expeditions, and abusive use of these tools in a way that could
eventually eliminate the privacy Americans have traditionally enjoyed
in their movements and activities.”
Proponents and observers of the technology agree that the impact of
drones will be sweeping — but they contend that their uses will be much
more mundane than sinister.
“People will see them [drones] more, but it won’t be this kind of
dystopian, ‘the skies are filled with robots spying on people all the
time’ kind of thing,” said Waite, who recently launched a Journalism
Drone Lab at UNL. “What I think will happen in 10 years is that all
manner of industries will be transformed — but in utterly banal ways.”
For instance, air freight companies may automate the flying of packages
from one city to another or farmers may use drones to monitor irrigation
systems. “If one of the spigots on one of those center pivot irrigation
systems — which are enormous, they’re hundreds and hundreds of feet
long — goes bad, a little swath of your crops out in the middle of your
field that you can’t see suddenly isn’t getting watered and will die,”
he said. A UAV could monitor the spigots to make sure they’re working,
and alert someone when they’re not.
Golf course operators are another potential customer. For instance,
UNL’s PGA Golf Management Program is interested in using UAVs to monitor
moisture distribution on fairways, according to Waite. “A little drone
could fly over and be taking pictures of the ground — and maybe they’re
multi-spectral images, so you can get an idea of how much soil moisture
is in the ground and the plants themselves,” he said. “By knowing this,
they would know that we only need to water this part of the fifth
fairway; we don’t need to water the whole thing.”
This would save hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of gallons of
water regularly. “UAVs could make golf courses significantly more
sustainable,” he said.
Before civilian UAVs can fully live up to their potential, however, drone manufacturers need to solve a few problems.
Often powered by batteries or fuel cells, small UAVs might only be able
to operate for 30 minutes to an hour at a time, said Toscano. Even as
UAVs become smaller, safer and more reliable, extending operating time
continues to be a challenge. “You want to be able to have these systems
operate for long periods of time,” he said.
Another technological hurdle is ensuring the security of UAVs. It’s
important that law enforcement agencies protect their systems from
criminals who would jam a signal or interrupt a mission, Toscano said.
And that very real threat is one that Todd Humphreys, who teaches
aeronautical engineering at the University of Texas, has begun to
address.
In late June, Humphreys and his students used a technique called
spoofing to hack into a drone and take control of it. The test on the
civilian, university-owned drone was done at the campus football field.
“We did an attack there just as a dress rehearsal for the next week when
we were invited by the Department of Homeland Security down to White
Sands [N.M.] to carry out the attack under their noses,” Humphreys told
American Public Media.
Just a week later, he and his students completed the demonstration for
the DHS, repeatedly overtaking navigational signals going to the
GPS-guided vehicle from about a kilometer away, according to the
University of Texas. Next year, they plan to perform a similar
demonstration on a moving UAV from 10 km away.
“We’re going to have civilian drones in our air space, and of course,
they’re concerned about the security of that premise, so [the DHS] would
like to look into any kind of vulnerabilities,” Humphreys told American
Public Media. “This is definitely a vulnerability, so they’d like to
patch this before 2015 comes around.”
To prepare for the 2015 deadline, Congress directed the FAA to designate
six test sites that will provide data on how to safely integrate drones
into the same air space as manned airplanes. The first test site — New
Mexico State University — became operational in June 2011.
The sites will help the FAA sort out certification standards and air
traffic requirements for unmanned flight operations. They’ll also help
the agency coordinate the introduction of drones and the development of
the Next Generation Air Transportation System, a massive overhaul of the
nation’s air traffic control system.
Meanwhile, the public safety community is addressing some of the policy
issues triggered by the new technology. In partnership with the
International Association of Chiefs of Police, Shinnamon is developing a
model UAV policy that could be adopted by law enforcement agencies
worldwide.
While he’s in agreement with the American Civil Liberties Union’s
recommendations for UAV policies, which include usage restrictions and
public notice, Shinnamon also recommends other safeguards. Law
enforcement agencies should engage their communities, including civil
liberties advocates, in UAV discussions, he said, and allow citizens to
review and comment on UAV procedures. A search warrant should be issued
if a UAV is targeting a specific location to gather criminal evidence,
Shinnamon said, and all flights should be approved by a supervisor.
Before the deployment of a UAV, he said, an emergency notification
system should alert citizens that the aircraft will be overhead. “It’s
new technology,” Shinnamon said. “There’s a whole education process that
goes along with that.”
Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office currently is drafting a policy manual
for its UAV. One rule that’s already in effect: The UAV can only be
approved for launch by either the sheriff or chief deputy.
Although the county’s UAV has yet to fly, McDaniel is already
considering possibilities for the future. While the department doesn’t
anticipate using a UAV with a weapons platform, he said, a device with
tear gas or nonlethal rubber bullet capabilities is a possibility.
McDaniel said he’d like to see UAV technology in the toolkits of more
law enforcement agencies. “I’m hoping that public safety agencies
throughout the United States will move forward in attempting to gain
this type of technology,” he said.
On the whole, the concerns will continue as UAV use grows and changes,
Shinnamon said. “As I’ve watched this technology evolve by leaps and
bounds over the last few years, there are lots of issues society is
going to have to come together to address.”
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